Heartbreaking Image Shows Real Cost of Cheap Palm Oil

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Palm oil is an extremely popular commodity. It appears in approximately 50 percent of everyday consumer products, ranging from cleaning fluids to snack foods. 90 percent of the world’s palm oil is produced in Malaysia and Indonesia … and, sadly, the truth behind its production in these countries are not as well-known as they should be.

In developed countries, we are seldom encouraged to think about how products like cookies and snack bars ended up on our shelves. Instead, manufacturers simply urge us to savor the taste and texture of these goods … never to ask questions about how its ingredients might have been made. Deforestation in Indonesia – where palm oil plantations have been destroying vital habitats such as the Leuser Ecosystem for a number of decades – seems remote from our lives. This is why photography is such an effective way of helping us to open our eyes to the reality of what has been going on.

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A heartbreaking image shared by The National University of Singapore (NUS) reveals just how devastating the ongoing disappearance of Indonesia’s forests has been.

Habitat destruction: in which the landscape is completely destroyed. An example of this would be the clearing of an entire forest to make way for a new building complex.

Habitat fragmentation: in which the landscape is broken up by human-made constructions such as roads, making it more difficult for the animals to access their usual food sources.

Habitat degradation: in which the ecosystem in question is no longer able to support its native animal species. This can occur through pollution, or through the introduction of foreign species.

In the picture above, an orangutan can be seen exploring the bleak landscape they must once have called home, with a dart lodged into their back. Sadly, orangutans are often shot on sight if they wander onto a palm oil plantation. Over the past two decades alone, an estimated 20,000 of these animals lost their lives at the hands of the palm oil industry. 60,000 of these animals now remain, and it has been estimated that they could be extinct in just thirty years if their current declining population trend continues.

The strongest action you can take to help save the humans and animals of Indonesia, together with the ecosystems they inhabit, is by cutting palm oil out of your life today. To learn more about how you can make a difference, read the articles below.

Africa uses a LOT of cooking oil and in the places I’ve been, it”s nearly ALL Palm oil with almost NO affordable alternatives. Anyone got an idea to get over here and start producing something else to take it’s place?

Africa uses a LOT of cooking oil and in the places I’ve been, it”s nearly ALL Palm oil with almost NO affordable alternatives. Anyone got an idea to get over here and start producing something else to take it’s place?